Shades of sovereignty: racialized power, the United States and the world Paul A. Kramer The segregated diners along Maryland’s Route 40 were always somebody’s problem – mothers packing sandwiches for a daytrip to the nation’s capital, Jim Crow on their minds – but they were not always John F. Kennedy’s problem. That changed in the early 1960s, when African diplomats began arriving to the United States to present their credentials to the United Nations and the White House. Between the high-modernist universalism of the former and the neo-classical, republican universalism of the latter, at just about the place where ambassadors got hungry, lay a scattering of gaudy, ramshackle restaurants straddling an otherwise bleak stretch of highway. As the motoring diplomats discovered to their shock, the diners excluded black people in ways that turned out to be global: whatever their importance to US foreign policy, African economic 1 ministers and cultural attaches received no diplomatic immunity. The incoming Kennedy administration soon confronted an international scandal, as the officials filed formal complaints and US and overseas editors ran with the story. “Human faces, black-skinned and white, angry words and a humdrum reach of U. S. highway,” read an article in Life, “these are the raw stuff of a conflict that reached far out from America in to the world.” Kennedy, reluctant to engage the black freedom struggle except where it intersected with Cold War concerns, established an Office of the Special Protocol Service to mediate: its staff caught flak, spoke to newspapers, and sat down with Route 40’s restaurateurs, diner by diner, making the case that serving black people was in the United States’ global interests. High-level officials argued for the desegregating of Maryland’s public accommodations for both visiting dignitaries and African Americans. “Let me say with a Georgia accent,” stated Secretary of State Dean Rusk, “that we cannot solve this problem if it 2 requires a diplomatic passport to claim the rights of an American citizen.” In the context of Cold War rivalry and African decolonization, Route 40’s petty apartheid was no longer just its own. Racialized power had a geopolitics; one that had suddenly brought the President to within two degrees of separation from the owners of the Double-T Diner.3 245 246 Paul A. Kramer This chapter explores intersections between the politics of racialized difference and the United States’ geopolitical histories, and the rich varieties of ways that historians have mapped them.4 The assertion that the United States’ place in the world had something – perhaps everything – to do with race would have been uncontroversial for those who dominated the nation’s early political, economic, and social life: slave-based capitalist empire, the displacement and elimination of Native peoples, and a sense of America’s Anglo-Saxon roots and destinies were widely understood to be foundational to and defining of the United States itself.5 Nor would this statement have surprised Native and enslaved peoples who a paid high price for US national- imperial expansion. From the mid-nineteenth century forward, it was the activism and scholarship of the critics of racialized supremacy, both those who suffered under it directly and their allies, who inaugurated the hard work – still unfinished – of shifting race from essentialized, ontological reality and moral norm to social construction and political problem. A rising, critical consciousness developed of the ways that racial systems in the United States formed an integral part of what W. E. B. Du Bois called a global belt of white supremacies, sparked by transnational abolitionism, and intensifying in particular where the expansion of a black public sphere and African Americans’ increasingly worldly horizons challenged exploitative, aggressively hierarchical European and US colonialisms at the turn of the twentieth century.6 By the early Cold War, a sense that the most egregious, visible, and terroristic faces of the US racial state – if not racialized social inequality generally – were, in an interconnected world, an international public relations problem in need of technocratic management, had shifted from outsider politics to establishment circles, including presidential administrations. But this awareness – vibrant in activist networks, intellectual circles and the black academy – was, for an extremely long time, segregated from the fortified precincts of US diplomatic history. This was not so surprising. With its Eurocentric, Atlanticist orientation, elite-centered methodologies, and aspirational ties to the State Department (an agency with its own deep history of exclusivity, including racial line-drawing), early diplomatic history embarked from confident assumptions about global hierarchy that were inhospitable, where they were not actively hostile, to critical accounts of that hierarchy, including of its racialized dimensions.7 This said, there were early works that, in recounting the history of US–Japan relations and the centrality of struggles over migration to those relations, necessarily emphasized the politics of racialized exclusion at their center; while important foundations, these works 8 did not establish race as an analytic category more widely. By contrast, mid-to-late twentieth-century scholarship in the history of US foreign relations witnessed a variety of dramatic openings when it came to the role of race.9 They were ushered in, first and foremost, by activists and intellectuals during the Vietnam War era that linked anti-racism and anti-imperialism, and critiques of American power to anti-colonial struggles throughout the world.10 In Racialized power 247 the long wake of these struggles, late twentieth-century historians of the United States’ role in the world began stressing the role of “nonstate” actors (including anti-racist activists); the social-historical experiences of groups that had, up to then, been marginalized within diplomatic historiography, especially African Americans, Latinos and Asian-Americans; and culturalist methods that, in their late twentieth-century modes, foregrounded questions of meaning, identity, and power. Given the centrality of the Cold War to US foreign relations historiography, and African Americans to the study of race in the United States, it made sense that the foundational works connecting race and diplomatic history established the fact of Jim Crow as an international embarrassment in the post-1945 period, and black and anti-racist activists’ varied uses of this reality, revelations that were bold and of enduring impact. Especially since historians’ discovery of this “Cold War civil rights” nexus, race has (against long odds) emerged as a major analytic category in US foreign relations historiography, figuring both in works that foreground it and, 11 just as importantly, in scholarship with fundamental concerns that lie elsewhere. Specifically, this chapter will discuss eight domains of scholarship, among many possible others: histories treating the racializing of sovereignty; policymakers’ approaches to race; race in cultural histories of American perceptions of the world; the making of transnational racial solidarities; transfers of racial and anti-racial practices; the racial politics of migration and border control; intersections of race and capitalism; and race in US militarization, war-making, and occupation. This chapter’s title has two intended implications. First, “shades” suggests the ways that the racialized politics of social differentiation were and are, to important degrees, reflections of – shadows cast by – conflicts over geopolitical questions: who legitimately governed whom, by what means, in the name of what principles, and toward what ends; about the meanings of nationhood and statehood in a globalizing world; and about definitions of and boundaries between legitimate and illegitimate violence. While conventional historiographic approaches have plausibly prioritized the causal power of race in shaping American geopolitics – particularly as the impetus, template or ready-made rationale for imperial projects – my approach here takes seriously the equally plausible but less explored proposition that struggles over the United States’ presence and power in the world, unfolding in transnational, imperial, and global contexts, played decisive roles in shaping Americans’ notions of racialized difference and its political meanings. Second, “shades” is meant to evoke degrees, gradations, and variations, as an explicit challenge to stark, counter-productive dichotomies that characterize literatures on both race (white/non-white, racism/anti-racism, racial/civic, exclusion/inclusion) and US foreign relations history (realism/idealism, culture/ power, domestic/foreign, empire/democracy). The most generative literature in this field, I’ll suggest, exposes the limits of these binaries by looking at the varied, evolving, and conflicting ways that Americans have made sense of their transnational encounters, including in racialized ways; the wide array of US 248 Paul A. Kramer geopolitical projects Americans have engaged in, and the complex, multi- directional ways these histories inform each other. To begin, the chapter attends to some necessary definitional work. Both despite and because of decades of struggle, race remains hard to pin down.12 Discussions of race have long been characterized by imprecise, essentializing definitions and intense, moral-political charge – themselves related – as well as identitarian
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